kelsiu
New member
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2014
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- 9
Suppose there is a sequence Xn=1/(n-2). We know we n tend to infinity the sequence tends to zero. But at n=2 it is equal to infinity. Is this sequence convergent?
There is also a theorem that all convergent sequence are bounded for every n. But the sequence above is not bounded at n=2.
From definition of convergent sequence it seems that only the case that n tends to infinity is concerned, it says nothing about whether it is convergent when n is finite but Xn is not.
In defining whether a sequence is bounded, n is for all values. Is Xn bounded?
There is also a theorem that all convergent sequence are bounded for every n. But the sequence above is not bounded at n=2.
From definition of convergent sequence it seems that only the case that n tends to infinity is concerned, it says nothing about whether it is convergent when n is finite but Xn is not.
In defining whether a sequence is bounded, n is for all values. Is Xn bounded?